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Microsoft’s Japan offices tested out four-day workweeks for a month and the results were unexpectedly positive. In the summer of 2019, Microsoft launched the ‘Work-Life Choice Challenge’ for
the month of August where they gave all of their 2300 employees a 4-day workweek with four consecutive Fridays off without pay cut, reported The Guardian. A statement published on Microsoft
Japan’s website said that as a result of the experiment, productivity shot up by 40% while there was a 25% decrease in time taken off. “I want employees to think about and experience how
they can achieve the same results with 20% less working time,” Hirano said in the statement. The initiative also required that the number of meetings be reduced by using a messaging app
instead and meetings not exceed 30 minutes. This resulted in more efficient meetings, read the statement. Moreover, there was also a 23% reduction in electricity consumption at the offices.
Although this was only a pilot project, Microsoft plans to reiterate the challenge in the winter. As of now, it is unclear if the plan has any scope for long term implementation or
introduction in other companies. It is also interesting that such a plan was introduced by Microsoft in Japan, a country known for its severe work ethic. It is perhaps the culture of
overworking to the point of _Karoshi _(death by overworking), a common phenomenon and a major issue for the government,_ _that_ _prompted the company to carry out their test run in the
country. _(Delhi is in a public health emergency. The air outside is visibly toxic - how has the hazardous air #pollution impacted you? Write down your #PollutionKaSolution and send it to us
at [email protected]__. )_